55 Me. 433 | Me. | 1867
If the plaintiff could make good his position that he, in his individual capacity, was employed by a majority of the selectmen, who are the prudential agents of the town, to keep a certain portion of the roads in the town free from obstruction by snow, (after the amount raised by the town for that object had been expended, and the power of the surveyor to employ laborers who might recover their pay from the town, had been exhausted,) and for that purpose to procure necessary help at his own expense, his claim for a reimbursement, upon proof that he had performed the service, might be considered as established.
But, unfortunately for him, the case presents a very different aspect; and we are bound to decide it according to the legal rights of the parties, although we may thus find ourselves compelled to refuse compensation to the plaintiff
On the 24th of January, 1861, the plaintiff was duly appointed by the selectmen, acting under R. S., c. 3, § 12,-a surveyor of highways in a certain district, to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Gilman Bennett, who had previously expended all the moneys appropriated for the repairs of highways in the district, including their proportion of the " snow tax.” In that appointment he was regularly invested with all the powers and required " to execute all the duties appertaining to said office.” He accepted it and was duly sworn. On the same day he received the following paper (signed by two of the selectmen,) which is the only evidence he produces of authority from the selectmen to make this bill against the town: —
"To Mr. John M. G-etchell, Sir, — You are requested to keep the snow broken down within the limits of your district, so as to make it passable, and do it with as little expense to the town as possible, and keep an account of each one’s own labor and make a return of it to us five days before our next annual town meeting.”
Signed,— "Wm. Storer, jr., ~i Selectmen
"Wm. Gooch, 5 of Wells.
"January 24, 1861.”
That this order was directed to the plaintiff in his official capacity, and required of him the performance of a certain duty in the office to which he had that day been appointed, is too manifest to admit of doubt or to require discussion. Its plain intent and meaning is, not to authorize him to do the work, pay the help, and look to the town for reimbursement, but, as a surveyor, in his district, under the statute, to employ, with the consent of the selectmen thus expressed, men of whose work he was to make return, and who would thereby become entitled to their pay from the town treasury. The rights and duties of surveyors of highways are specifically defined by statute, and their powers are limited to those thus conferred by legal enactment. And the tendency
It is not perceived that the condensation of this § 50 from § 74, c. 25, R. S. of 1841, was designed to affect the mode of making payment to the parties rendering the service, or that it gives to the surveyor the right to volunteer a payment to the persons employed, and recover of the town. He was requested to make return to the selectmen " of each one’s own labor” in order that the selectmen might know how much each map was entitled to receive. To enable him to recover even the trifling amount of fifteen per cent, of the snow tax for his district, it should at least have appeared that he made the required return, and that those whom he had rightfully employed had been refused their pay by the town authorities, and had claimed and received it at